However, in this timeline, due to the presence of Nix, the entire Mediterranean situation has become quite different.
After Caesar broke the siege laid by the Egyptian army, along with the successive arrival of reinforcements, he also received one bad news after another.
Pharnaces, the son of Mithridates, the King of Pontus who fought Rome for many years and was eventually defeated and killed, surrendered to Rome early on. Hence, Pompey made him the King of Bosporus, which was only a small part of Pontus territory, and he was already dissatisfied.
Later, when the Roman civil war broke out, the Dacian King Brebiusta secretly sent envoys to persuade him. Thus, Pharnaces saw this as a godsend opportunity to reclaim lost territory. After Caesar left Greece, he quickly raised an army and seized large portions of land that originally belonged to Pontus, even defeating the reinforcements of Caesar's Legion Commander Calvinus and slaughtering the captured Roman soldiers.
